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Showing posts from November, 2021

China's Seed Nationalism

China is scouring the countryside to find native seed, animal and fish genetic resources in a national germplasm census according to Economy Daily , a communist party news outlet. The purpose is to protect "family property" and gain self-reliance in crop and animal breeding. "Excellent" plant and animal resources will be protected on company-run farms if they are in danger of extinction or turned over to Chinese seed and breeding companies to exploit their commercial potential to propel Chinese seed companies as global competitors.  Improvement of China's seed industry is one of the national priorities set at last December's planning meeting for economic work this year. The germplasm census launched in March 2021 was one of the activities ordered by this year's "Document Number One" issued by China's central communist party leadership. The germplasm census is expected to be completed in 3 years. The activity is canvassing all Chinese counti...

108 companies have 25% of China's sows

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Just 108 companies now control a fourth of China's swine production capacity, according to a list prepared for a recent swine industry forum . Unpredictable gyrations in China's hog market continue with the influx of big pig farmers, contrary to the expectations of agricultural officials.  Pigs have historically been scattered across millions of backyard pens, sheds, and living rooms in Chinese villages. At the peak of backyard pig-farming, China's 1997 agricultural census counted over 130 million rural households raising pigs--usually one or two at a time--and those small family holdings accounted for 95 percent of the swine inventory.  In recent years a handful of companies have been on a hog-farm construction binge. Their expansion accelerated during a 2014-17 environmental regulatory push that shut down hundreds of thousands of small farms. Then the African swine fever epidemic wiped out millions more of small farms, biosecurity requirements and a new round of subsidi...

Pork Conglomerate Corporate Welfare

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The tentacles of subsidies and government aid are entwined with the world's largest hog farmer. China's Muyuan Food Group--an ostensibly private company--has sold more than 31 million swine through October this year. If Muyuan hits the top range of its targeted output of 35-to-45 million head this year--it will come close to matching the entire production of Brazil or Russia.  Last week local communist party authorities in Nanyang City of Henan Province--Muyuan's hometown--issued a document calling for 15 policy measures to support Muyuan with the goal of propelling the company into the Fortune-500 list of the top companies in the world. The policies feature measures that are invisible to outsiders. They include central government transfer payments for hog-producing counties and manure utilization demonstration projects, easing up on land-use planning and environmental assessments, local government loan guarantees, aid for constructing breeding centers, industrial parks, l...

Blizzards Could Affect China's Corn Marketing

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Record snowfall across northern China this week is the latest in a string of unusual weather events in 2021. A report in China Grain Net raises concerns that the heavy snow could impact this year's corn marketing. With northeastern China already under a cold wave, snow began falling November 5 and continued for days. The storm was expected to let up by November 12, with temperatures rising above freezing in parts of Liaoning Province. The snowfall has broken records kept since 1951. The snow comes at the end of the corn harvest and in the early part of the marketing season for the corn crop in northeastern provinces--China's main corn surplus region. Snow and ice have closed down many roads, disrupting transportation of corn from the northeastern provinces to other parts of the country. The prospect of tighter supplies nudged prices upward. The May futures contract for corn on China's Dalian exchange rose 0.7% to RMB2734 per metric ton.  The snow also threatens to degrade ...

China Food Prices Down; Energy Prices Soar

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China had 1.5-percent growth in consumer prices over the past 12 months according to its October 2021 Consumer Price Index (CPI) report . The U.S. CPI showed 6.2-percent growth over the same period.  The food component of China's CPI was down 2.4 percent over 12 months while its nonfood component was up 2.4 percent. By comparison, the food component of the U.S. CPI was up 5.3%.  Source: China National Bureau of Statistics. The decline in the food component of China's CPI is entirely due to the popping of China's pork price bubble. Pork prices in October were down 44 percent from a year ago. Most Chinese food prices rose by 2 percent or less over the past 12 months. Consumer prices for grain products were up just 0.9 percent. A handful of food items rose more than 5 percent: vegetables by 15.9 percent; eggs by 12.6 percent; fish by 8.3 percent; and edible oil by 6.4 percent.  Energy commodities propelled the rise in consumer prices. The fuel component of China's CPI w...

Agriculture in China's Free Trade Agreement Strategy

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A global network of high-standard free trade areas is one of the components of China's 14th five-year plan.  A recent Farmers Daily article  by a staff member at the agriculture ministry's trade promotion center explained the strategic role of agriculture in China's pursuit of regional free trade agreements (FTAs). The article appears to be part of a flurry of articles aimed at boosting China's ambitions to join the RCEP agreement set to take effect next year.  The author explained that FTAs and the multilateral trading system are two wheels of the globalized economy. In 2002, China began negotiating its first FTA with ASEAN, the southeast Asian trading bloc--immediately after joining the WTO. By the end of 2020 China had 19 FTAs with 26 countries and regions. Agriculture plays an important role in China's FTA strategy, the author claimed.  Agriculture has generally played a relatively minor role in China's FTAs. A perusal of China's FTA partners listed on a...

Bail Out the Bankrupt; Keep the Masses Fed and Warm

After hearing a report on an inspection of 16 provinces, China's Premier Li Keqiang ordered officials to help major companies escape financial ruin, plug holes in local government finances, and keep the masses fed and warm. Behind the scenes, officials are worried that Olympic ice skaters will have enough vegetables to eat.  Premier Li's top priority at the November 2 meeting was to help major market players alleviate "new" financial difficulties and fine-tune an economy facing "new downward pressure." Specific problems he cited include unpaid debts to small and medium enterprises, financial problems for some local governments, and rising costs due to soaring commodity prices.  The second priority is to address "pain points" for the common people, including unpaid wages for teachers, unpaid medical expenses, reconstruction of aging residential communities, and other "unsolved problems" related to maintaining the basic standard of living....

Chinese Land Sales Income to be Redirected to Countryside

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Chinese real estate creates riches out of thin air by seizing rural land on the urban fringe, re-classifying it as "state-owned," selling it, building on it, and reselling it, padding its value each time. This process has created countless millionaires and bolstered municipal finances. Now Chinese officials have belatedly decreed that a larger share of those riches should be returned to the countryside to support agriculture and rural infrastructure.  A document issued in September 2020 decreed that the 50 percent of income from sales of requisitioned land should be earmarked for agricultural and rural use by the end of the 14th five-year plan in 2025.  At a press conference on the document last year a rural policy team headed by former rural development czar Han Jun (now governor of Jilin Province) estimated that the average share had been 34 percent during 2013-18. Han's task force estimated that increasing the share by 1 percentage point would generate 60-70 billion ...